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Early Rehabilitationin in Tibial Spine Avulsion Fracture Managed With Arthoscopic Fibre Wire Fixation
Sponsor: Abdul Jabbar
Summary
Tibial spine avulsion fracture is a common knee injury in adolescents and young adults, often caused by sports trauma or falls. It involves avulsion of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) attachment from the tibial eminence and may lead to pain, restricted range of motion, instability, and long-term functional limitations. Arthroscopic fixation using fiber wire is a widely accepted surgical technique for restoring joint stability. However, there is ongoing debate regarding the optimal timing of postoperative rehabilitation. Traditionally, delayed rehabilitation protocols have been used to protect the surgical repair, but prolonged immobilization may lead to joint stiffness, quadriceps atrophy, delayed recovery, and prolonged return to sports. Early rehabilitation protocols aim to initiate controlled mobilization soon after surgery to enhance recovery of knee range of motion, muscle strength, and functional performance while maintaining surgical stability. This randomized clinical trial will compare the effectiveness of early rehabilitation versus conventional (delayed) rehabilitation in patients aged 15-25 years who undergo arthroscopic fiber wire fixation for tibial spine avulsion fracture. Outcomes including knee range of motion (measured using a goniometer), muscle strength (measured using a hand-held dynamometer), and functional disability (assessed using the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Score) will be evaluated at baseline, 6 weeks, and 12 weeks postoperatively. The findings of this study may help establish evidence-based rehabilitation guidelines and determine whether early rehabilitation provides superior functional outcomes compared to conventional therapy following tibial spine fixation.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
15 Years - 25 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
56
Start Date
2026-02-27
Completion Date
2026-05-30
Last Updated
2026-02-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Early Postoperative Rehabilitation Program
The Early Postoperative Rehabilitation Program will begin immediately after arthroscopic fiber wire fixation of tibial spine avulsion fracture. During the first postoperative week, patients will perform protected exercises including ankle pumps, quadriceps isometrics, straight leg raises, and controlled active knee flexion limited to 30 degrees without resistance. The PRICE protocol (Protect, Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation) will be applied. From weeks 2-6, controlled progression of knee flexion (up to 90-100 degrees by week 6), gradual introduction of partial weight-bearing (up to 30%), and supervised strengthening exercises will be implemented. From weeks 7-12, rehabilitation will focus on progressive resistance training of quadriceps and hamstrings, balance an
Conventional (Delayed) Rehabilitation Program
The Conventional Rehabilitation Program will involve knee immobilization for the first 6 postoperative weeks following arthroscopic fiber wire fixation. During this period, patients will use a knee immobilizer and perform home-based management including ankle pumps, straight leg raises, quadriceps isometric exercises, icing, leg elevation, and non-weight-bearing ambulation. Formal rehabilitation will begin after week 6 and will include gradual restoration of knee range of motion, progressive strengthening of quadriceps and hamstrings, controlled weight-bearing progression, and functional training exercises. Advanced strengthening, proprioceptive training, and sport-specific exercises will be introduced only after adequate healing and surgeon clearance.
Locations (1)
University of Lahore Teaching Hospital, Lahore
Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan